From the United States, events on the Korean Peninsula have moved quickly and dramatically - we were first surprised to find that North Korea had ballistic weapons that could reach continental United States and before we knew it, the president of the United States was meeting Kim Jong-un face-to-face. But what did this all look like in South Korea? The South Korean people have lived with the risk of war for decades - they have also seen their presidents travel to Pyongyang in the past to talk about peace.
In this context, what has the past year looked like for South Korean audiences?
We speak with veteran journalist and Seoul bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal Jonathan Cheng to get a sense of how things look from the ground.
What are Domestic Politics Doing to the U.S.-Korea Alliance?
Charting China’s Use of Armed Coercion: James Siebens (Part 2)
Charting China’s Use of Armed Coercion: James Siebens (Part 1)
Where are North Korea's Relations with Russia Headed?
The U.S.-ROK-DPRK Strategic Triangle in the Indo-Pacific Era
How Can Korea and Australia Cooperate in the Indo-Pacific?
Energy Insecurity: How Resource-Poor Korea and Japan Powered Their Economies
The Costs of War: Deepening North Korea-Russia Ties
Economic Security and U.S.-China Competition: The View From North Korea
Rhetoric Vs. Reality: Seoul and Washington’s Strategic Alignment on Taiwan
Korea’s Cultural Wave: The Story Behind the Strength
South Korea: Caught in the Crosshairs of U.S. China Competition Over Semiconductors
The ROK-U.S. Alliance at 70: Expanding Diplomatic Horizons Through Public Diplomacy
What We Know and Don’t Know about North Korea
From K-Pop to K-Beauty: KEI at KCON
South Korea and Global Public Health Beyond the Pandemic: Dr. Jerome Kim
Building Trilateral Momentum: The U.S.-Korea-Japan Summit
The Challenges of Implementing Sanctions on North Korea: An Expert’s Perspective
Democracy and Duty in Korea: Aram Hur
Humanizing Korea: E. Tammy Kim
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free